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Convert years to Roman numerals
FULL TUTORIAL
You will see the left side of an equation. Then you will see and hear two possible answers for the right side of that equation.

Click on the correct answer.
FULL TUTORIAL
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You will see the left side of an equation. Then you will see and hear two possible answers for the right side of that equation.

Click on the correct answer.

There are 10 questions in this test.
1/6
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The correct answer is
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Convert years to Roman numerals
      
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Elementary math lessons to learn
'Convert years to Roman numerals' for 5th grade

Convert year dates such as 1981 or 2017 to Roman numerals

In this topic you are given a year and must convert it to Roman numerals. Follow the steps below for each question.

Break the year down into its component parts: For example, 1981 can be broken down into 1000, 900, 80, and 1.

Convert each part to Roman numerals:

1000 = M
900 = CM
80 = LXXX
1 = I

Write the Roman numerals in order:
1981 in Roman numerals is written as MCMLXXXI.

Similarly, for 2017:
2000 = MM
10 = X
7 = VII
2017 in Roman numerals is written as MMXVII.

With these interactive math lessons you will be learning "Convert years to Roman numerals" from
5th grade / Counting in 3 easy steps. The math in our lessons consists of 6 questions that ask you to convert year dates such as 1981 or 2017 to Roman numerals.

Show lesson introduction
1 / 6
The year 2000 in Roman numerals is: ⅯⅯ
2000
ⅯⅯ
2 / 6
The year 2019 in Roman numerals is: ⅯⅯⅩⅠⅩ
2019
ⅯⅯⅩⅠⅩ
3 / 6
The year 1980 in Roman numerals is: ⅯⅭⅯⅬⅩⅩⅩ
1980
ⅯⅭⅯⅬⅩⅩⅩ
4 / 6
The year 1999 in Roman numerals is: ⅯⅭⅯⅩⅭⅠⅩ
1999
ⅯⅭⅯⅩⅭⅠⅩ
5 / 6
The year 1672 in Roman numerals is: ⅯⅮⅭⅬⅩⅩⅠⅠ
1672
ⅯⅮⅭⅬⅩⅩⅠⅠ
6 / 6
The year 1066 in Roman numerals is: ⅯⅬⅩⅤⅠ
1066
ⅯⅬⅩⅤⅠ

There are 3 easy math lesson activities in this "Convert years to Roman numerals" tutorial. These activities progress step by step to help you the learner gradually master this math topic. The activities are based on "3 stage questioning", a method of learning that quickly and easily builds your confidence as you work through the short series of lessons that strengthen your knowledge of the math that you want to learn.

When you have completed the tutorial for a topic, you should try some of our games before finally doing the test for your chosen topic. See the Help box below for detailed instructions on how to use the lesson activities to help you learn your math more easily.

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How to use our tutorials to learn
'Convert years to Roman numerals' for 5th grade

Introduction to the math topic

You start the tutorial with a lesson that introduces the math you will be learning. You will see a set of questions one at a time, and for each question you will see the written answer and also hear the answer to that question.

Repeat the question/answer by clicking on the brown speaker sign. Repeat the question/answer and expand the question graphic by clicking on the question box. Move between questions using the arrow buttons below the question. If there is additional information available for your chosen topic, the "i" button on the left upright bar will be brown on white. Click on the button to load the additional lesson information into the main interface.


Either / Or math lesson

This lesson moves on from the "Introduction" lesson and offers you two possible answers to each question. So, you will see a question then a voice will ask "Is this ... or is it ..." and you will have to choose which of the answers is the one that matches the question.

You choose an answer by clicking or tapping on one of the two answer boxes below the question. You can play the audio for each answer again by clicking on the speaker icon beside the written answer (if robot speech is available and enabled). The program will let you know each time whether you answered correctly. A star will light up red for a wrong answer or white/black for a correct answer.

This lesson asks you the questions in a random order compared to the introduction. At the end of the lesson, you can choose whether to repeat the lesson or move on to the next one.


What is it? math lesson

The final lesson of the tutorial shows you multiple possible answers for each question - you must choose the correct one. You are asked a question and below it are a list of two, three, or four possible written/numeric answers from this topic. Pressing the speaker icon will play the math audio for that answer.

For each picture, click on the answer that matches the question. The program will tell you whether you are right or not. As with the Either / Or activity a system of stars indicate your right and wrong answers. The What is it? lesson will show you all the questions you learned in the Introduction but in a random order.


When you complete the "What is it?" lesson, you can choose whether to go on to play some games with this topic, or whether you want to repeat some or all of the lesson activities in this tutorial. You should expect to get 80% of the answers correct in most of the activities before trying some of the Math games with this topic.

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